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Thursday, July 9, 2009

My Oregon Craft Beer Month: Joan Crawford. Radiant.

Posted by Patrick Alan Coleman on Thu, Jul 9, 2009 at 11:30 AM

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Don't worry... it's only a little amber. It won't hurt a bit.

I imagine a craft beer loving Joan Crawford coming into my apartment. For some reason she is in her house coat, her face whitened by an exfoliating cream. I’m taking a nap on the couch. She looks at me sleeping there and smiles sweetly before going into the kitchen. She straightens the appliances, puts away a dish or two, opens the fridge, and then the freezer. She stops. Her expression falls. She reaches out and pulls a frosted pint glass from the freezer door:

FROZEN PIIIINT GLAAAAASES! I told you! NO! FROOOOZEN! PINT GLASSES! EVAHR! I buy you beautiful beers and you treat them like they’re dishwater! A five, six dollar beer in a frozen pint glass! Frozen pint glasses… Frozen pint glasses… Why? Whhhyyyyy!!!???

Wide awake now, I watch in horror as she throws the glasses to the kitchen floor, ranting and raving. Eventually she finds the Barman’s Friend powdered cleaner and, well, when Joan gets a hold of the Barman’s Friend you best just start scrubbing.

That’s the scene that was going through my mind last night before I cranked open the top on the Ninkasi Radiant summer ale. You see, I’d been discussing with Lisa Morrison how I’d had a bottle of the Full Sail LTD 3 and completely fucked everything up. I blamed the complete lack of flavor I experienced in the beer on the meal I’d eaten before pouring. Turns out, that probably wasn’t what was happening. What made the beer so watery and lifeless at the beginning of the pint and so full and open in the last third? I’d poured the cold beer into a frozen pint glass.

Science! Adventure! Fruit Salad! After the jump!

Let’s take a walk back through all the chemistry classes I took when I was studying to be a nurse. If I recall, higher temperatures lead to more vigorous chemical reactions. A really cold beer, while generally refreshing, will be molecularly sluggish. The volatile chemicals in the beer, responsible for aroma and flavor, will not be reacting as quickly with each other or with the oxygen they’ve been exposed to. No aroma? No flavor!

The reason the beer began to open up towards the end is because the glass warmed, as did the beer itself. It never reached room temperature, but it did warm enough for the molecules to start jostling around more fervently, releasing aroma and flavor.

I imagine Joan Crawford rolling her eyes and hissing, “Of course, you moron!”

How did this trend start? Morrison has a theory it has something to do with poor quality domestic lagers. You do not necessarily want to taste those babies. Think of that color changing mountain on the label of your Coors Light bottle more like a radiation badge. If it’s blue, go ahead and drink. If it’s not blue, you’re in for some shitty times.

Funny. We’ve heaped scorn on warm English beer for so long because the only way we can palate our crappy corporate brew is to serve it ice cold. Hmm.

So, I’ve removed my pint glasses from the freezer and put them in the bar with all of the other “refined” glassware. No more will I kill these lovely Oregon craft beers.

I was excited to pour Ninkasi’s Radiant (the beer that arts editor Alison Hallett calls her “new summer jam”) into my room temperature pint glass. Holding it to the light, it revealed beautiful amber color. There was a slight citrusy hit from hops in the aroma at first whiff, but as the glass warmed in my hands I could smell strawberry and kiwi, with just a touch of banana. It reminded me of a tropical fruit salad. Very juicy.

On the palate I tasted more of that strawberry and a bit of malt. It was like a very fresh strawberry jam on an ethereal biscuit (someone please adopt “ethereal biscuit” as the name for their jam band). The finish was light with just enough hops bitterness for me. I’m beginning to find that I enjoy beers in this range of IBU (40 here, a well balanced 60 for their Believer, which I also enjoyed). At the very tail end I got a hint of pepper, but I might have had that stuck in my teeth from lunch. Who’s to say?

The hops used in this beer is noble hops, a classification that encompasses four hop varieties. Nobel Noble hops are known for high aroma and low bitterness, which would explain why I had that first hit of citrus on the nose, but had to chase the bitterness a bit on my palate.

I’d love to put this beer back to back with other noble hops beers. Any suggestions?

As always, I welcome your comments! A discussion is so much more enjoyable than one man’s mad rantings about beer and Joan Crawford. Had Ninkasi’s Radiant? Oh, do dish!

 

Comments (10) RSS

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1
"Nobel hops are known for high aroma and low bitterness" They're also known for inventing TNT and giving awards and medals out in Sweden.

Dumb-ass.
Posted by Graham on July 9, 2009 at 11:42 AM · Report
2
Not the kind of discussion that I was looking for, but, whatever. Glad you at least skimmed it for spelling errors.
Posted by Patrick A. Coleman on July 9, 2009 at 11:53 AM · Report
3
I will say that I'm a big fan of cooled glasses though. If I'm drinking high-end beers, I run the glass under cold water for a couple of seconds to chill it to refrigerator-esque temperatures. That way the glass and the beer are starting at about the same temperature.

Have you started drinking cask from an engine yet? That'll really edumacate ya on the ideas of mouth feel and carbonation. Moon and Sixpence usually has at least two beers on cask.

I really wish Ninkasi would just go ahead and open a brewpub in Portland. Preferably around 45th and Hawthorne.
Posted by Graham on July 9, 2009 at 12:03 PM · Report
4
(Now I know where to find you Graham. I'm watching you....)

Most ales are actually best at around 50 to 55 degrees, which is well above where the average fridge is set. If there's a beer you really want to taste, you can just set it out for ten minutes or so to warm a bit, or just know that it will develop as you drink it.

Pabst and the like should be as cold as possible.

I'll have to try the Radiant. I drank mucho of their spring Reign.
Posted by Blabby on July 9, 2009 at 12:25 PM · Report
5
@Graham

Now that's the discussion I was looking for. In February I posted an embarrassing blog post (is there any other kind for me?) about hanging out with Rock Bottom's Van Havig and drinking his cask-conditioned releases. It was eye opening, for sure. But I was still largely uneducated in the ways of craft beer.

I haven't yet started hitting the local brew pubs in earnest this month, but that will likely change this weekend. I'll try to get in at least two cask-conditioned beers this weekend and post my thoughts.

I also wish for a Ninkasi brewpub. Your suggested location is perfect.
Posted by Patrick A. Coleman on July 9, 2009 at 12:37 PM · Report
6
OMG Did Graham and Blabbs just actually give helpful and useful comments??? To the same post??? Patrick you have just united the polar opposites of the troll spectrum.
Also I've really been enjoying these beer posts of yours.
They have been making me thirs-T.
Posted by Abusive on July 9, 2009 at 12:51 PM · Report
7
@abusive Blabbs and I were united on the stupid fucking idea of the quiet no-talking bar night thing as well. We may argue on the politics, but what kind of Portlander can disagree over drinking good beer correctly?
Posted by Graham on July 9, 2009 at 12:53 PM · Report
8
Are you sure you didn't get a big ol' oily taste of butterscotch with that Ninkasi? Last few times I've had their beers they've been bad--diacetyl city--and apparently it's become a problem with their stuff.
Posted by jake on July 9, 2009 at 1:13 PM · Report
9
@jake

There was a bit of caramel at the start but I couldn't find it after the second sip. I did experience some overwhelming butterscotch in something I had at Green Dragon the other day, but I forget what it was. That's helpful, eh?
Posted by Patrick A. Coleman on July 9, 2009 at 1:26 PM · Report
10
abusive, Graham and I have our disagreements, but there's no division over proper beer drinkage.

I have tasted diacetyl in Ninkasi beer before.
Posted by Blabby on July 9, 2009 at 2:12 PM · Report

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